Ah, so it is basically nothing more complicated than that really?
It's simply the wound moisture acting as the electrolyte which breaks apart
those ion clusters {particles} initiating the release of Ag+ ions
again...Yes/No?
Similar if the product is ingested, only this time the internal body fluids or
moisture act as the electrolyte which results in the same breaking down of
those 'particles' thus releasing the Ag+ ions...Yes/No?
And *that* is what they refer to as the 'compound' part, simply the blood or
body fluids creating a compound due to the 'electrolytic' aspect as that
electrolyte interacts and initiates or releases those Ag+ ions from the
particle structure...Yes/No?
N.
Date: Wed, 26 Feb 2014 06:53:46 -0500
To: [email protected]
From: [email protected]
Subject: Re: CS>ion-exchange compound?
One ion exchange method [vs compound] is used by bandaids brands
silver bandaid.
A layer of silver woven fabric, an inert layer of fabric with an aluminum
woven layer on the other side.
The body fluids of a wound act as an electrolyte triggering a battery
cell effect where silver ions head towards the aluminum making a small
EIS generator.
Silver sulpatimide
Ode
At 02:52 PM 2/26/2014 +1100, you wrote:
Below is an extract which mentions,
quote "ion-exchange compounds" end quote.
What constitutes an 'ion-exchange compound' in relation to *only* Ag+
ions dispersed in Distilled Water? Does simply Ag+ ions dispersed
in DW by the LVDC electrolysis method constitute a compound in this
instance? Or does it refer to something else added to the
water?
I'm not interested in the 'salts' part, only the 'ion-exchange compound'
part.
Extract: "Many types of silver dressings are treated
with silver ions either in the form of silver salts or silver
ion-exchange compounds. For these types of treatments, silver release
requires moisture or moisture plus ions to solubilize and facilitate
release of Ag+ ."
N.
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